Prem M. Trivedi
Director, Open Technology Institute, 国产视频
In late January, a went out to New Hampshire Democratic voters in a voice that sounded pretty close to President Biden鈥檚. The message encouraged them not to vote in their state鈥檚 primary and to instead 鈥渟ave [their] vote鈥 until November. The message was generated by a text-to-speech deepfake program and, thankfully, it . But it served as yet another sobering reminder of what voters in the United States and around the world are up against this year. Fears about the intersection of abound. The news is replete with reminding us that information integrity, artificial intelligence (AI), and social media will be during the world鈥檚 .
Over 4 billion people are expected to go to the polls this year against a backdrop that seems grim for democracies. A growing number of societies around the world are increasingly fractured and susceptible to dangerous identity politics. Political scientist Pratap Bhanu Mehta wrote recently that 鈥渘ationalism is 鈥攁 trend that could accelerate in a damaging way this year.鈥 Authoritarianism is on the rise, and the consequences of are widely felt. Well-established technologies like social media, in combination with rapid advances in AI, appear to (rather than cause) actual polarization and may well fuel a broad that polarization is even worse than it is.
In societies characterized by , political division, and stark economic inequality, it鈥檚 easy for politicians and citizens to embrace extreme positions, assume that technology will inevitably erode democracy, or overemphasize finding tech solutions to problems with social roots. Instead, we need to get back to democratic fundamentals.
Technologies are human tools designed for human needs, and we do ourselves a disservice when we think of them as inscrutable collections of hardware and software that can only be governed by a narrow slice of society. How they are designed and what needs they serve matter. Technical and policy approaches to hard problems must be grounded in long-standing liberal democratic traditions that balance different societal interests, safeguard the rights of marginalized groups, protect a free press, and create safe environments for people to engage in open dialogue. Revitalizing these principles is more urgent than ever as Americans鈥 support for democratic norms erode.
In the world of tech policy, a focus on guardrails that protect democracy is vitally important. Tech governance challenges reflect the broader challenges democracies are confronting. Rapid developments in the digital age keep shifting the balance of power among governments, citizens, companies, and consumers. Our persistent focus on social media flows from an intuitive understanding that technological and democratic evolution is increasingly intertwined. Social media services depend on advertising business models that prioritize attention and don鈥檛 inherently privilege safety, privacy, or the veracity of content. This poses obvious challenges for democracy, even if the precise relationship among social media, mainstream media, , and is unclear.
No matter the tech policy question or challenge at hand, we must ground ourselves in time-tested democratic principles.
AI adds another layer of complexity. This year, the tech policy community is tracking key issues that will arise repeatedly during this year鈥檚 electoral campaigns. These issues include , social media companies鈥 decisions to that track and counteract harmful speech, and the state鈥檚 role in fostering competition and innovation. Many countries have long been wrestling with how they can exert over the Internet and . The United States is no exception.
There are causes for fear during this year of elections but also reasons for cautious optimism. Governments are engaged in a that can sometimes be counterproductive, but at least reflects appropriate attention on urgent challenges. In the United States, Congress is both and yet constrained in what it can accomplish. But that鈥檚 not the case in the states, where supermajorities in 40 states ensure that legislatures will continue to be . And the executive branch has taken a people-centric approach to AI governance that is responsive to dogged advocacy from civil society groups. This approach is evident in the White House鈥檚 , a recent executive order on AI, and in the Office of Management and Budget鈥檚 implementing guidance. Meanwhile, U.S. officials at the national, state, and local levels are focused on our elections from AI-driven disinformation and cyberattacks.
No matter the tech policy question or challenge at hand, we must ground ourselves in time-tested democratic principles. At the heart of every tough technology governance question is a social question fundamental to liberal democracies: How should we innovation, progress, and the need to ensure that the most vulnerable communities benefit most and are protected from disproportionate harms? These questions are central to the concepts of digital inclusion and equity that undergird 国产视频鈥檚 approach to the relationship between technology and democracy.
Global elections will demand our attention in 2024. As countries confront challenges at the intersection of tech and democracy, voters will need to remind their elected leaders that healthy democracies prioritize their people in at least three ways. First, they promote robust civic engagement through voting and other means; they do not it. Second, healthy democracies safeguard freedom of expression and zealously protect the freedom of the press. Third, strong democracies work hard to ensure that people are safe鈥攐nline and offline鈥攖o engage civically and engage in open dialogue. No matter which technologies ultimately dominate the conversation in the 2024 elections and beyond, technocracy alone won鈥檛 illuminate the way forward. Tech policymaking must remain rooted in the fundamentals of liberal democracy to build an equitable and resilient digital future.